DIY Wedding Dress Preservation
/I love my wedding dress, and all my accessories. My ensemble was everything I ever pictured. And even better, the dress was only $400 because it was, in fact, a white bridesmaids dress. I don’t know what bride is putting her bridesmaids in this gorgeous gown, but her dress better be incredible to compete with this, and I thank her for ensuring they exist.
Well, I wore the hell outta that dress on my wedding night. I tore holes in it with my stilettos, and I got it dirty, and I didn’t care. I knew I’d never wear it again. I did love the sparkly elements of it though, so I had the idea to cut out the gorgeous beaded neckline and the custom belt, and arrange them with the beaded veil and hair combs in a shadow box as soon as I got home. Then, I put all of those things in a box, and thought about it every time I opened the closet for the next 9 years.
About 6 months ago, I moved the box to my craft table and got the shadow box. About 3 months ago, we started doing craft classes. Now, that box was taking up valuable real estate on my craft table. It was time. Cue the supplies:
- My wedding dress 
- My veil 
- My hair combs 
- My earrings 
- The custom beaded belt from my wedding dress, preserving some of the buttons 
- Fake flower boutonnières from the wedding 
- Hot glue gun, and lots of glue sticks (I think I used 6) 
- Scissors 
- 14x14 white felt 
- 12x12 2” deep shadow box 
- Floral pins with pearl heads 
Steps:
- Prepared the pretty things - My veil is beaded/embroidered and gorgeous, and I want my daughters to be able to use it for their wedding if they’re so inclined, so that means no hot glue to hold it down. - I laid it out in front of me, and rolled the edges in on both sides so that when I was done, I had one long vertical veil strip about 5” wide, with the middle prettiest part exposed. 
- Then starting from the top where the hair comb is, I rolled it down toward the bottom of the veil until I had about 10” of veil left, and it was the best beaded/embroidered part. 
- Then I used small clamps to hold the roll in place while I worked on placement. 
 
- The custom beaded belt. I say custom because the beaded lace was part of another dress, and I asked to have it put on mine. To preserve it: - I cut it out of the dress, keeping a few of the dress buttons. I sealed the cut edges with fabric glue. 
- Then I placed it so that I had the dress buttons on the right, face up, and about 8” of belt laid out to the left. The rest I rolled up. I didn’t glue or clamp it or anything, just placed it to the side. 
 
- The beaded neckline. I cut as much of the sheer beaded neckline out as possible, then I folded the cut edges under and held them in place with glue dots. 
- The earrings, hair combs, and flowers didn’t need preparing. 
 
- Affixed the felt to the backing (the felt holds all the pretty things) - I opened the shadow box and put the backing in front of me, non-hardware side up 
- I placed the felt on the backing, and then put the backing back onto the shadow box, empty, and used the swivel pegs to hold it in place while I tightened the felt so there were no wrinkles. 
- While still in place, I hot glued all the way around the edge of the felt with hot glue. All the way around. No gaps. 
 
- I planned the layout - I took the backing back off the shadow box, now covered with felt. 
- I made sure I knew where the top of the backing is (based on where the hanging hardware is). I didn’t actually do this, but I got lucky. If you’re doing this, make sure you check which edge should be the top. 
- I took one of the black spacing squares from the shadow box assembly for and placed it on top of the backing so I knew my boundaries. 
- Then I laid out all the pretty things how I wanted them displayed. 
 
- Glue and pin - Starting with the strings from the neckline, I arranged and glued. I decided on a heart pattern for the strings, cause you know, love. Once I had those glued down, I glued the rest of the beaded neckline down, again all the way around the edges. 
- Then the hair pins. Glue. Place. 
- Then the belt. The belt is also beaded and gorgeous; I don’t know if the girls will ever want it, but I wanted the option. I hot glued the part of the dress I had cut, with the buttons, on the bottom right. Then laid out the belt across the bottom of the frame and pinned the roll on the other side. I didn’t glue anything on the left side, so it’s rescue-able. 
- The veil. I had a cheap rhinestone wrap bracelet that was perfect to hold the roll in place, and then I pinned the roll to the top left of the frame, and tucked the bottom of the veil under the belt. 
- Placed and glued the flowers. You’ll notice in the Timelapse (if you watch it) that I mess with the flowers a couple times. The first time I put the frame together I didn’t like how the flowers smushed against the glass, so I took it all out, glued the flowers how I wanted them to smush, and put it together again. Good times. 
- The earrings. Glue. Done. 
- Last, a couple loose flowers over some gluey spots. 
 
- Assemble. This was a bit of a fight because the veil was so puffy. I fought the backing (now decorated) back on the shadow box though (twice, remember the flowers redo), and I love it. 
I threw the rest of that filthy, torn up, cut up, beautiful, gorgeous dress away. Yes, I did.
No regrets, because I get to look at my favorite parts of it every day.

 
                     
            